Anatomy of an Advanced Persistent Threat: TEEX (AWR-XXX)

The New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, New Jersey Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Cell, and the New Jersey State Police will be piloting a one-day training program titled: Anatomy of an Advanced Persistent Threat. The course will be delivered by the Texas Engineering Extension Service (TEEX), a member of the National Domestic Preparedness Consortium (NDPC).

COST: None, but please preregister as seating is limited.

DESCRIPTION:This course provides students with a firm understanding of an advanced persistent threat. This knowledge will place them in a better position to plan for, and recover from inevitable cyber attacks. This course will fill the gap in threat specific training for cybersecurity as a community driven course that will focus on the Advanced Persistent Threat (APT); describing, analyzing and demonstrating the phases of an APT and the attack methods used. The course will also provide participants with prevention, mitigation and response techniques that correspond with the cyber kill chain and the NIST cybersecurity framework.

TARGET AUDIENCE:This course is for information security and cybersecurity personnel and managers, emergency responders, risk management personnel, planners, critical infrastructure representatives from both private and public sectors, and other personnel responsible for identifying and responding to cyber incidents and those who are involved in developing organization strategies.

REGISTRATION

If you have any questions regarding this training, please email Michael Urbanski at MUrbanski@njohsp.gov.

This web site was prepared at the direction of the New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness pursuant to its authority under Executive Order No. 5 of 16 March 2006, and to provisions of the New Jersey Domestic Security Preparedness Act. This web page may contain confidential, sensitive homeland security information that shall not be deemed to be public record under the provisions of P.L. 1963, c. 73 (c.47:1A-1, et seq.) or the common law concerning access to public records.